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Discovery[1] | |
---|---|
Discovered by | Siding Spring Observatory |
Discovery date | October 10, 2004 |
Designations | |
P/2004 TU12 | |
Orbital characteristics[2] | |
Epoch | 27 October 2010 |
Aphelion | 4.873 AU |
Perihelion | 1.233 AU |
Semi-major axis | 3.053 AU |
Eccentricity | 0.5961 |
Orbital period | 5.33 years |
Inclination | 27.817° |
Last perihelion | 7 December 2020 |
Next perihelion | 17 May 2026 |
TJupiter | 2.792 |
Earth MOID | 0.239 AU |
Physical characteristics | |
Dimensions | 14.06 ± 0.96 km[3] |
32.86 hours[4] | |
0.022 ± 0.003[4] | |
Comet total magnitude (M1) | 15.2 |
162P/Siding Spring is a Jupiter-family comet with an orbital period of 5.3 years. It was discovered in images obtained on 10 October 2004 as part of the Siding Spring Survey.[1]
The comet was discovered during the Siding Spring Survey as an asteroidal object shining with an apparent magnitude of 14.1 but a tail extending for about 4 arcminutes was observed on 12 November 2004, indicating that it is a comet.[1] The tail grew longer the next days, reaching a length of over 10 arcminutes on 15 November. Two days later the tail was fainter, and bearly visible within one arcminute from the nucleus.[5] On 21 October 2031 the comet will approach Earth at a distance of 0.2456 AU (36.74 million km).[2]
The comet was observed by NASA Infrared Telescope Facility in 2004, finding that the nucleus has an effective radius of 6.0 ± 0.8 km, which corresponds to a visual albedo of 0.034 ± 0.014,[6] and a reflectance spectrum typical of a D-type asteroid.[7] Further observations by the Spitzer Space Telescope indicate an effective radius of 7.03 ± 0.48 km.[3] This is one of the largest nuclei of Jupiter family comets with known radius.[6] More detailed observations indicate that the nucleus has axis ratios a/b = 1.56 and b/c = 2.33, and could possibly have two lobes.[4] The sidereal period of the comet is 32.864 ± 0.001 hours.[4]